[Dtoid Community Blogger RenegadePanda shares his strange fascination with the absolute worst videogames ever made.Want to see your own words appear on the front page?Go write something!–Mr Andy Dixon]

Many months ago, I came to a realization about myself. I started looking at the games I played, noted which I enjoyed, determined why, and found that my entire gaming collection is pretty much divided into four parts. Of the first three, you will no doubt notice at least one in your own collection: AAA titles, B titles, and niche Japanese fare. But the fourth is something I’ve never really understood my attraction to, something that makes me constantly question just how the hell my brain works…

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I love crappy games.

I don’t exactly know when this started, but it’s definitely been most prevalent during the current generation, and it’s become a part of me. I’mthat guywho walks into a store, picks up a copy of a universally panned game, and pays far too much for it. All the while getting a confused look from the cashier as he or she finally hands me the game and says, in a serious tone, “You know this game is awful, right?”

To which I respond, “Yes, that’s why I’m buying it.”

A battle scene in Battlefield 6 Open Beta

I then leave the store with an odd sense of misplaced pride in my purchase. And yet, I still don’t know why. I just spent $20 on a used copy ofBlackwater, a game that was widely accepted as one of the absolute worst shooting games of this generation. Shouldn’t I feel ashamed? Stupid? Why am I so excited to go home and play this game, which I’m fully aware is a steaming pile of crap?

Because I’m going to love every second of it.

In fact, I choseBlackwaterbecause it’s the most recent example of this phenomenon. I’ve played it quite a bit, and I even cleared out my Kinect space just to play it. I’ve kicked in dozens of doors, capped hundreds of poorly textured terrorists in a country painted exclusively in brown and darker brown and chock full of dialogue from people who redefine the word “monotone”. I’ve beaten the game multiple times, and legitimately enjoyed the experience every time, despite knowing that the experience I’m enjoying is painfully bad.

So what draws me to this? That’s what I’ve never been able to figure out. What strand of my DNA causes me to absolutely loveOnechanbarato the point where I have beaten it four times now to the tune of 500+ Gamerscore? What sane person would legitimately name this game their second favorite Xbox 360 game? Even as the person typing this, I know howinsanely stupidthat sounds. It’s to the point where you probably think I’m making this up just to be dramatic.

capcom evo moment 37

Even beyond that, some of the games I’ve enjoyed most this generation have been critically panned by both critics and gamers alike.Bullet Witch? I bought that at full price the day it came out.Otomedius Excellent? I bought two (count ’em) copies of the Special Edition.Duke Nukem Forever? I own two copies of that, too.Blades of Time? You better believe I ran out and bought that the day I read about it here onDestructoid.

In fact, it’s become an addiction of sorts. I actively seek out and purchase the kinds of games that other people are actively seeking toget rid of. My brain is wired for it. When I see a mediocre game sitting on a shelf, usually at a discounted price, I almosthaveto buy it. When someone traded in a sealed copy ofCrash Time: Autobahn Pursuitat my old Play N Trade, I immediately jumped and said “I’m buying that.” I didn’t even hesitate.

GigabyteMon

Think about that. This game looked so awful that the previous ownerdidn’t even bother to unwrap it.

And I paid $10 for it.

And I played it. I played four hours of it, and it was beyond mediocre. Hammy British voice acting, wonky car physics, completely asinine (and sometimes impossible) missions, and glitches galore. But it’s still sitting on my shelf, right next to my copy ofNier. And that four hours was, from start to finish, filled with a completely strange sense of satisfaction, knowing that if anyone ever looked at my achievements, or my gaming shelf, they’d have no idea what the hell that game actually was.

Even as I sit here typing this, I know the only thing holding me back from buyingBomberman Act: Zero(with its completely misplaced colon) is that the GameStop near me doesn’t have the original case and book for it. That’s right, I can’t buy it incomplete. I treat it like it’s a copy ofRadiant SilvergunorEarthbound, because in my mind, this thing has value — even though it’s completely worthless and would struggle to sell for a dollar on eBay.

A snap of the upcoming MESA update in PEAK

Raise your hands; how many of you actually went out and searched specifically for a copy ofTarget Terroron the Wii? I did. And I found one, and I played it, even though the IR aiming is atrocious and the game is practically unplayable because of lag. I paid $15 for a game that would have sold poorly as a $5 downloadable title. And all because I get some kind of sick, perverted enjoyment out of how bad the game truly is.

And how many people in their right mind bought a Sharpshooter and Navigator controller with the sole intent of playingHeavy Fire: Afghanistan? How many people spent three hours trying to unlock one glitched achievement inEat Lead: The Return of Matt Hazardjust to say, “Yeah, I 1000’d that game.” Or got excited whenJane’s Advanced Strike Fightersdropped to $20?

Naked Snake sneaking around in MGS Delta.

So now, as I sit staring at my imported copy ofGal*Gun, I still don’t understand why I’m so in love with these games. I look back at all the money I’ve spent on them that could have gone torwardsanything elseand think,am I weird? Am I just blind? Has some kind of genetic defect caused me to enjoy something I technically am not enjoying?

I suppose I may never understand why, but I embrace my condition with pride. So the next time you see a guy buyingSecret Service, tap him on the shoulder and ensure, with a smile on your face, that you tell him, “You know that game is awful, right?”

Battlefield 6 aiming RPG at a helicopter

BO7 key art

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Milla Jovovich portraying Alice in Resident Evil 2002, wearing a red dress and holding a gun in her hand.